The KUBARK Manual of Counter-Intelligence Interrogation by Central Intelligence Agency

In 1963 a CIA program known as KUBARK created the Manual of Counter-Intelligence Interrogation for dissemination to its operatives. The manual contains detailed instructions on interrogating people who may have vital information, such as captured operatives. Using modern behavioral psychology the manual takes the operative step-by-step through the entire process of establishing and conducting counter-intelligence interrogation operations, from legal and policy considerations to selecting the right interrogator, to defining the personality types of those to be interrogated (and thus choosing the right approach for each individual) to “coercive” methods for extracting information from un-cooperative subjects. A fascinating document that is as valid today as it was forty years ago – perhaps one of the most important pieces of applied behavioral psychology ever created, and only begins to reveal the dark side of intelligence gathering interrogation operations such as todayâ€™s Rendition program.

Bush did this. Good for you Mona. Way to speak out. Read what you write and consider using a dictionary, so you don’t trivialize your plight, you illiterate tank. All countries do this. Most people consider themselves informed, although the truth can’t be handled by most. Unfortunately in today’s society, these actions are necessary and must be maintained for future survival. Maybe one day we can dissolve this mindset when peace is obtainable, but until you can make all color flawlessly equal, all language non-regional, everyone the same height, and all people exactly the same in every manner, this conclusion is doubtful. In every society, there is a group inherently better than all others. If there is one slight difference, there will be hate and fear.